Monday, December 2, 2019
6 Priceless Lessons Entrepreneurs Learned From Their Earliest Jobs
6 Priceless Lessons Entrepreneurs Learned From Their Earliest Jobs Welcome to Recruiter QA, where we pose employment-related questions to the experts and share their answers Have a question youd like to ask? Leave it in the comments, and you might just see it in the next installment of Recruiter QATodays Question What job did you have early in your career that taught you the fruchtwein? What were the important lessons that you learned? The answers below are provided by members of FounderSociety, an invitation-only organization comprised of ambitious startup founders and business owners.1. Be Ready for AnythingI started my career working for a startup as an analyst. When youre part of something new and innovative, youre surrounded by opportunity. With opportunity comes flexibility and spontaneity. One of the biggest lessons Ive learned is to welcome change. Be open to changing direction in this ever-evolving world, and be willing to adapt to your cult ure and surroundings. Nadia Hansen, Result Logix 2. Customer Happines Is Your Bottom LineI worked as a guide in Alaska prior to launching Salty Girl Seafood. I spent days with my customers during their trips and learned about the importance of customer happiness and how to tailor the same product/service to different needs and interest levels. The bottom line is making your customers happy and aligning your companys objectives with achieving that happiness 100 percent of the time. Laura Johnson, Salty Girl Seafood 3. Throw Yourself Into a Competitive MarketI worked for R.H. Donnelley (now Dex Media) for about four years, and it welches the best experience possible. I got exposure to and discovered my passion for digital marketing and SEO, and I was put into some of the most difficult situations in my career. I learned what it takes to succeed in a challenging work environment in Chicago, which has an extremely competitive market. This was an invaluable experience. Christopher Rodgers, Colorado SEO Pros 4. Never Be SatisfiedAs a teenager, I worked for a light manufacturing operation near my house. I hated how mundane the work was, so I spent any downtime I had trying to create more efficient processes. Within a few months, I had tweaked the procedure and became the top producer. It taught me that just doing satisfactory work is the trap that prfests most of us from doing incredible work. Tony Banta, Live Mercury, Inc. 5. Systematize as Much as PossibleI worked in a very unorganized warehouse a few summers in a row and learned that everything can be done more efficiently if you can systematize it. It took a few months, but once we got a system and schedule in place, we literally had about half the work to do, compared to the amount we had to do before the system. We systematize everything we can now, and it helps just as much as it did back then. Ben Walker, Transcription Outsourcing, LLC 6. Make the Most of the Situation Youre InI was laid off from Mic rosoft, my first job out of college, during the financial crisis in 2010. This life event knocked me off of the stable corporate track. Ive been pursuing my entrepreneurial dreams ever since, and its the best thing that ever happened to me. James Hu, Jobscan .openingBlock img width 100% height 100% max-width 640px display block clear both align center float none margin-left auto margin-right auto margin-bottom 20px .openingBlock .alignleft width 100% height 100% max-width 640px display block clear both align center float none margin-left auto margin-right auto .middleBlock img border-radius 150px -webkit-border-radius 150px -moz-border-radius 150px box-shadow 0 0 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, .8) -webkit-box-shadow 0 0 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, .8) -moz-box-shadow 0 0 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, .8) .middleBlock strong font-size 24px color 1f77a0 .middleBlock .contributorBlurb max-width640px displayinline-block clearnone font-stylenormal font-size 16px color 666666 background f9f9f9 .middleBlock .contribu torBlurb p font-style normal font-size 16px color 666666 .middleBlock .contributorBlurb .socialIcon border-radius 0 -webkit-border-radius 0 -moz-border-radius 0 box-shadow none -webkit-box-shadow none -moz-box-shadow none
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.